devlinks

Synopsis

/usr/sbin/devlinks [-d] [-rrootdir] [-ttable-file]

Description

devfsadm(1M) is now the preferred command for /dev and /devices and should
be used instead of devlinks.

devlinks creates symbolic links from the /dev directory tree to the actual
block- and character-special device nodes under the /devices directory tree. The links
are created according to specifications found in the table-file (by default /etc/devlink.tab).

devlinks is called each time the system is reconfiguration-booted, and can only
be run after drvconfig(1M) is run.

The table-file (normally /etc/devlink.tab) is an ASCII file, with one line per
record. Comment lines, which must contain a hash character (`#') as their
first character, are allowed. Each entry must contain at least two fields, but
may contain three fields. Fields are separated by single TAB characters.

The fields are:

devfs-spec

Specification of devinfo nodes that will have links created for them. This specification consists of one or more keyword-value pairs, where the keyword is separated from the value by an equal-sign (`='), and keyword-value pairs are separated from one another by semicolons.

The name of the node. This is the portion of the /devices tree entry name that occurs before the first `@' or `:' character.

addr[n]

The address portion of a node name. This is the portion of a node name that occurs between the `@' and the `:' characters. It is possible that a node may have a name without an address part, which is the case for many of the pseudo-device nodes. If a number is given after the addr it specifies a match of a particular comma-separated subfield of the address field: addr1 matches the first subfield, addr2 matches the second, and so on. addr0 is the same as addr and matches the whole field.

minor[n]

The minor portion of a node name - the portion of the name after the `:'. As with addr above, a number after the minor keyword specifies a subfield to match.

Of these four specifications, only the type specification must always be present.

name

Specification of the /dev links that correspond to the devinfo nodes. This field allows devlinks to determine matching /dev names for the /devices nodes it has found. The specification of this field uses escape-sequences to allow portions of the /devices name to be included in the /dev name, or to allow a counter to be used in creating node names. If a counter is used to create a name, the portion of the name before the counter must be specified absolutely, and all names in the /dev/-subdirectory that match (up to and including the counter) are considered to be subdevices of the same device. This means that they should all point to the same directory, name and address under the /devices/-tree

The possible escape-sequences are:

\D

Substitute the device-name (name) portion of the corresponding devinfo node-name.

\An

Substitute the nth component of the address component of the corresponding devinfo node name. Sub-components are separated by commas, and sub-component 0 is the whole address component.

\Mn

Substitute the nth sub-component of the minor component of the corresponding devinfo node name. Sub-components are separated by commas, and sub-component 0 is the whole minor component.

\Nn

Substitute the value of a 'counter' starting at n. There can be only one counter for each dev-spec, and counter-values will be selected so they are as low as possible while not colliding with already-existing link names.

In a dev-spec the counter sequence should not be followed by a digit, either explicitly or as a result of another escape-sequence expansion. If this occurs, it would not be possible to correctly match already-existing links to their counter entries, since it would not be possible to unambiguously parse the already-existing /dev-name.

extra-dev-link

Optional specification of an extra /dev link that points to the initial /dev link (specified in field 2). This field may contain a counter escape-sequence (as described for the dev-spec field) but may not contain any of the other escape-sequences. It provides a way to specify an alias of a particular /dev name.

Options

The following options are supported:

-d

Debugging mode - print out all devinfo nodes found, and indicate what links would be created, but do not do anything.

-rrootdir

Use rootdir as the root of the /dev and /devices directories under which the device nodes and links are created. Changing the root directory does not change the location of the /etc/devlink.tab default table, nor is the root directory applied to the filename supplied to the -t option.

-ttable-file

Set the table file used by devlinks to specify the links that must be created. If this option is not given, /etc/devlink.tab is used. This option gives a way to instruct devlinks just to perform a particular piece of work, since just the links-types that devlinks is supposed to create can be specified in a command-file and fed to devlinks.

Errors

If devlinks finds an error in a line of the table-file it
prints a warning message on its standard output and goes on to
the next line in the table-file without performing any of the actions
specified by the erroneous rule.

If it cannot create a link for some filesystem-related reason it prints
an error-message and continues with the current rule.

If it cannot read necessary data it prints an error message and
continues with the next table-file line.

Examples

Example 1 Using the /etc/devlink.tab Fields

The following are examples of the /etc/devlink.tab fields:

type=pseudo;name=win win\M0
type=ddi_display framebuffer/\M0 fb\N0

The first example states that all devices of type pseudo with a
name component of win will be linked to /dev/winx, where x is
the minor-component of the devinfo-name (this is always a single-digit number for the
win driver).

The second example states that all devinfo nodes of type ddi_display will
be linked to entries under the /dev/framebuffer directory, with names identical to
the entire minor component of the /devices name. In addition an extra
link will be created pointing from /dev/fbn to the entry under /dev/framebuffer. This
entry will use a counter to end the name.